Award winning WoW designer and TV presenter Fifi
Colston will be running 4 special workshops for us this July Holidays. Learn
how to design and make some special wearable art. The workshops will be run to
coincide with the publication of her new book Wearable
Wonders. Where:
Museum of Wellington City & Sea and Carter ObservatoryDates:
MoWCaS Mon 15 July or Carter Fri 19 JulyAge: 8 -
14yrsTimes:
10.30am - 1pm/2pm - 4.30pmPrice: $25
(includes all materials)

Create exciting
textures from paint and paper with Fifi Colston, writer, illustrator and TV
presenter. Fifi shows you how she did the illustrations for 'Far Far From Home'
and will guide you through making an artwork of your own.

Wearable Wonders

Wed 24 Jul 2013 @
1:30pm– 4pm Wed 24 Jul 2013

Paint, glue &
tape time - make a wearable art piece. Fifi Colston writer, illustrator and
Wearable Art Designer will help you create your very own WOW garment. Be it a
helmet, skirt or crazy arm decorations, you can use a favourite book character
as your inspiration.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Parting shot from husband as he
emerges from the ensuite wearing his usual Sunday morning attire- a wetsuit.

"That'll be because no-one has
cleaned it for 4 weeks," say I, thereby implying that somebody should and
it shouldn't be me.

"I cleaned the loo last
time," he says pulling the rubber up over his arms. I know this means liberal
amounts of pine scented cleaner squirted around the bowl and an industrial
strength scrubbing with a sad looking brush from which most bristles are
missing. The surrounding areas of seat, lid and that particularly nasty bit at
the back where pee mingles with pubes and
the whole thing looks like a snapshot from the Young Ones, is not addressed.

"Do me up," he says.

The zipping up of the wetsuit is a
Sunday morning ritual. I am usually awoken from a dream where Daniel Craig is
offering me the opportunity of a lifetime by the words "I'm
ready."This gets confused in my
sleepy state and groping for my glasses, I arise unclothed to the man dressed
as a seal before me. It is not Daniel. I am always slightly disappointed, as he
would be when confronted with a middle aged woman clad only in eyewear and sporting
a bad case of bed hair. Unless he was 75, in which case I'd be an alluring bit
of early morning crumpet. I zip up my
husband and wonder briefly what he'd do without me. I like to think he is just testing to see if I
am still alive.

The cleaning of the bathroom is
something that I feel should just happen by itself. If it gets filthy enough
surely it will start to shed the dirt like snake and it's skin, leaving just a
trail of scales that can be brushed away into a handy dustpan, leaving a shiny
new surface glistening in the morning sun. I've always thought I was cut out
for something better; that I shall never be famous for white tile grout. For a
while when we were feeling flush, if you'll excuse the bathroom pun, I paid
someone to do it. Despite the feeling that I was born to higher things in life
(though coming from distinctly British working class roots I have no idea why)
the sparkling tiles made me feel guilty and like a complete twat for'having a cleaner'. Like I was somehow
superior. I wonder if Lady Gaga ever feels like that? It's a pretty safe bet
that she doesn't scrub the dunny herself, but if she did she'd work it into a
video with fabulous costumes and a bevy of hot boys in tow. I might be more
inclined if that was the case.

After lengthy internal debates with
myself over a cup of tea in bed, about the unfairness of it being 'my turn' to get
out the Spray'n Wipe (I lose my own argument due to husband having mown the
lawns, done the washing and the vacuuming as well as cleaning the rangehood), I
face the task at hand. All I really want to do is have a long shower, now that
the water restrictions are less imperative, and think about who to hit up next
for work, or about the lemon curd tart in the fridge which I hope nobody has
eaten. Instead, the sink fungus beckons. I scrabble about for scouring agents,
glass cleaners, cloths, scrubbers and Exit Mould. I know in my heart that all you need is white
vinegar and baking soda, but I feel better armed with environmental pollutants.

There is a collection of bench clutter to deal with. All the glossy mags showing
exquisite bathrooms do not have people using them. How can they? Where for
instance are the half used tubes of cold sore ointment, moisturisers, dental
floss, shaving cream and painkillers? Or the hair product that never works
except at the hairdressers where you shelled out $40 for it because it made you
look like Helen Mirren at the Academy Awards. There is the electric toothbrush
that collects layers of yellowed plaque around its base, a magnifying mirror
that zooms into blackheads like a forensic investigation computer programme,
and a jar of sheep fat which I am told is lanolin for wetsuit chafing
avoidance. My husband smells like an old ram on a Sunday morning. I worry that
sharks will get a taste for mutton.

The bathroom floor itself is small
in area with underfloor heating which I refuse to let the family turn on except
for one month in July which coincides with my birthday. I feel that the
outrageous power bill resulting is in lieu of a present. Even from a distance the
dust and hair on the floor is visible. Where did the dust come from? I'm not an
old lady with Lily of the Valley talcum powder. The hair is definitely not
mine. I shave my armpits and have only one small other patch left to shed.
Which leaves either my furry chested husband or a visiting werewolf the
culprit. I feel like Nicole Kidman in 'Fur' playing Diane Arbus with a blocked
drain courtesy of herhirsute neighbour.

Then there is the shower. The best
way to clean it is whilst you are in there. Naked. This way you don't get your
clothes wet and you can wash the cleaning agentsoff yourself at the same time. I wonder if
Hitchcock's wifewrote that scene in
Psycho? It might have been her turn to clean the shower. I have tried many and
various products that promise miracles without scrubbing. They lie. Stabbing is
too good for them.The only way they
work successfully is if you use them without your glasses so you cannot see the
result. Wearing glasses in the shower is pointless due to the steam, and if
Daniel Craig DID happen to drop in, you wouldn't be able to see him before he
copped a look at you with your fogged up goggles and anti bacterial
sponge.I may be the only woman in New
Zealand who puts contact lenses in only to clean the shower. This has the
unwanted benefit of being able to look down at yourself with clear vision and
get distracted by scouring the flaky skin on your legs instead of the tiles. This
is best done with body exfoliation gloves.

I've found that hands and knees are
the trick. Get down on them with the gloves on your hands and deal to the
shower floor. As I'm doing this, it occurs to me if I had a video camera I
could film it. There are people who would pay good money to see this kind of
thing. I could set up a pay for site called 'Scrubbers' , or Youtube
clips.They would go viral and I could
monetise the 3 billion views. Then I could pay for someone to clean the
bathroom for me and I'd get over feeling spoilt.

I leave the shower and bathroom in
my excitement to search out recording equipment on Trademe. The plug hole still
has mould around it.